We Need to (Finally) Discuss That Road & Track Article

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

A few weeks ago, venerable car-enthusiast magazine/Web site Road & Track created a mini-controversy with the deletion of an article from the Internet.


The article, which can still be found here, is a feature story in which a journalist who describes herself as a socialist gets assigned to travel from Chicago to Austin, Texas to cover last year's Formula 1 event at the Circuit of the Americas. Despite the race occurring last fall, the article was published on March 1.

As you might guess, the writer, Kate Wagner, chafed a bit at the insane amounts of money on display at an F1 race. She spends almost 4,000 words doing so.

This article would've probably gone relatively unnoticed by all but regular R&T readers and maybe a few others who were inclined to agree -- or vehemently disagree -- with Wagner's political view of the world at large and F1 specifically. Pretty routine, really.

But then R&T pulled the piece. This naturally caused observers to raise eyebrows. Wagner was critical -- relatively mildly, in my opinion -- of F1, Mercedes-Benz racing, and Ineos, the petrochemical company that also is a small automaker. Mercedes-Benz/AMG racing was also involved in sponsoring the trip for media.

So, since Wagner was honest and at times critical in her piece, some observers started to believe the article was pulled because it wasn't friendly enough to her sponsors.

Ineos and Mercedes deny this, and R&T boss Daniel Pund also denied this in the linked Washington Post article. We reached out to Pund for comment and he did not reply.

Mercedes also did not reply, while a spokesperson for Ineos echoed what the company said in the Post story.

A quick aside -- yes, this is becoming old news. Somehow I missed the discourse until last week, and at that point I was traveling and needed some time to read the article and reach out to involved parties before writing this. Also, a disclosure -- I've met Pund but do not know him well. Any criticism of him here is for his actions/decisions. He seems like a nice enough guy but I think he mishandled this situation.

Finally, despite living in the same city, I do not know Wagner and I don't believe we've ever met, even briefly.

Anyway, I take issue with his decision to pull the piece. He claims that he felt no external pressure and made the decision because he has a vision for R&T, and the article doesn't fit that vision.

Backing up a second, Pund is relatively new to being in the driver's seat -- he was recently promoted. It seems that he may not have been aware the article was in process when he was in his previous role.

It's fine to have an editorial vision for the outlet you manage, there's nothing wrong with that. But I find it hard to believe that he didn't become aware of the piece between his promotion in January and its publication in March. If he had known about it and didn't want to run it, he could've easily quietly spiked it and paid Wagner for her efforts. Kill fees for freelancers vary from place to place, but generally speaking, a freelancer who has held up their end of the bargain and has an article killed after submission but before publication will get at least some money for their work.

Had Pund not known the piece was in process -- unlikely but possible, especially at a large outlet -- until after publication, he should've let it stand, even if it didn't fit his vision. When you takeover the head job, you don't just make it fit to your vision on day one. You do it slowly, over time. You either allow previous approvals of freelance pieces to continue as planned or kill the pieces before publication.

If not, you have a mess on your hands, especially in today's media climate. Taking down an article that's critical of a massively popular racing series that is drowning in money is going to raise eyebrows. Doubly so when you regularly cover the series and some of the companies that race in it.

He also inadvertently drew more attention to the article than if it had just run as planned. People tend to notice when articles get taken off the Internet.

I am not saying that Pund bowed to outside pressure -- and to be clear, if he did, that would be journalistic malpractice. There's no evidence of funny business here. I suspect this was just clunky handling by an editor who didn't, for whatever reason, want this particular piece to be published.

Even if Pund's reasons for pulling the piece were pure, journalistically speaking, it still created a mess. Had he let it stand, however begrudgingly, he wouldn't be answering questions about the magazine's ethics.

Sometimes it's better to leave things alone.

[Image: Cozine/Shutterstock.com]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • Rob Conley Rob Conley on Apr 11, 2024

    Having attended the 2019 F1 race in Monaco on an F1 Experience pass, I get where she's coming from. If she thinks the wealth display in Austin was something she should have been sent to Monaco.


    I don't know why R&T pulled the story. It certainly is a bad look for them. I am at a total loss though as to why someone who doesn't even drive is writing for a car magazine. Having subscribed to R&T (C&D and Motor Trend as well) since the early 1980's I miss the car people who used to be involved with those enterprises. I'm just glad these discount magazine subs are 12 for 4 years. They'd be dead at full price.


  • Bankerdanny Bankerdanny on Apr 30, 2024

    Why send this particular journalist? Her point of view should have been well known, what kind of story did they expect to get from her?

  • 3-On-The-Tree I like my 2009 C6 Corvette LS3 better. Plus it gets 30 mpg on the highway.
  • El scotto Inside EVs? Like that's not biased not a bit. /s The US government just put a 100% tariff on Chines EV's. Do BYD's or other Chinese EVs even come close to meeting US crash regulations? My money would on an empty Amazon box instead. The car market has imploded. The big three were too greedy and thought everyone wanted top-spec trucks and suvs. Too bad not everyone could afford them. The EV market has imploded in magnitudes greater than the ice market. This is exactly the wrong time to enter the US EV market.In the end, the Chinese will help a lot of lawyers buy boats. The Chinese have no respect and do not recognize intellectual property. The Chinese copy of the Land Rover that was reported that manufacturers should be very afraid of? Naw, if the Chinese try to import that lawyers will be pushing wheelbarrows full of money.Then again, any country that is great at making athletic shoes in not, repeat not known for the quality of their vehicles.Or in five years we could all be ordering our new rides off Temu.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Oem’s should fire whoever made the decision to drop V8’s in favor of Turbo V4 and V6’s. Got it was for emissions but I’m sure they could make V8’s more emission compliant. My F150 Ecoboost gets the same mileage as my 2021 Tundra 5.7. In addition to renewing my faith in extended warranty’s as it was a maintenance nightmare.
  • ToolGuy Nice car. I would buy it but I wouldn't be able to put fuel in it, plus I am not a criminal.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Old news if it is even true. But from m my time as Firefighter/EMT fighting vehicle fires when it catches fire it is very toxic.
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